2017
DOI: 10.1016/j.foodres.2017.03.020
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Vulnerability of global food production to extreme climatic events

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Cited by 18 publications
(10 citation statements)
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“…Flooding of terrains where leafy green vegetables are grown can lead to an increase in the presence of pathogenic microorganisms in irrigation water and/or in the plants, weeks after rainfall (Castro‐Ibáñez, Gil, Tudela, & Allende, ). In fact, extreme rain and/or flooding events can lead to contamination of produce by means of direct contact of contaminated water with the plants, wash‐off, or splashing of pathogenic microorganisms from contaminated soil or manure, or indirectly via contamination of the water sources used for irrigation and production of plants (Cann, Thomas, Salmon, Wyn‐Jones, & Kay, ; Yeni & Alpas, ). The preparation of packaged salads is of concern, as contamination can occur during preparation and packaging (infected handlers; Julien‐Javaux et al., ), as well as during washing (contaminated water or cross contamination among plants; Gombas et al., ).…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Flooding of terrains where leafy green vegetables are grown can lead to an increase in the presence of pathogenic microorganisms in irrigation water and/or in the plants, weeks after rainfall (Castro‐Ibáñez, Gil, Tudela, & Allende, ). In fact, extreme rain and/or flooding events can lead to contamination of produce by means of direct contact of contaminated water with the plants, wash‐off, or splashing of pathogenic microorganisms from contaminated soil or manure, or indirectly via contamination of the water sources used for irrigation and production of plants (Cann, Thomas, Salmon, Wyn‐Jones, & Kay, ; Yeni & Alpas, ). The preparation of packaged salads is of concern, as contamination can occur during preparation and packaging (infected handlers; Julien‐Javaux et al., ), as well as during washing (contaminated water or cross contamination among plants; Gombas et al., ).…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…contaminated water with the plants, wash-off, or splashing of pathogenic microorganisms from contaminated soil or manure, or indirectly via contamination of the water sources used for irrigation and production of plants (Cann, Thomas, Salmon, Wyn-Jones, & Kay, 2013; Yeni & Alpas, 2017). The preparation of packaged salads is of concern, as contamination can occur during preparation and packaging (infected handlers; Julien-Javaux et al, 2019), as well as during washing (contaminated water or cross contamination among plants; Gombas et al, 2017).…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Several studies have attempted to incorporate adaptive capacity in the vulnerability assessment using approaches such as aggregated quantitative indicators [8][9][10] or semi-structured interviews [11][12][13]. Indicators of adaptive capacity were also grounded in sustainable livelihood theory as a set of different forms of assets to which people have access, such as financial, human, resource, or physical assets [14].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Despite the extensive research, improvement is required to identify and choose driving forces and indicators that more accurately determine the relationship between socio-economic factors and vulnerability [17]. Detailed studies along these lines have been recently conducted at the European [7,11,18], Australian [13,16,19], and in few cases at global scales [8,20], but the issue has not been thoroughly addressed in SSA countries. Naumann et al [21] calculated composite indicators that reflect different aspects of vulnerability and adaptive capacity at the Pan-African level.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%